Judith Arnold
I was pregnant with my younger son when I attended my first
writers conference. My older son was twenty months old, and attending the conference
meant spending several nights away from him for the very first time. I admit I was
anxious about leaving my child—not that I had any doubts that my husband was up
to the task. He couldn’t wait to enjoy a few days of male bonding with his
little guy. In fact, he’d been the one to insist that I go.
I was already multi-published and under contract with two
publishers when I made my writers conference debut. I’d begun writing romance
novels before my first son was born. I’d dreamed of being a published novelist
longer than I’d dreamed of being a mother, and I was not going to let his birth
interfere with my dream. On the other hand, I was not going to be anything less
than a perfect mother.
Thus, from the moment of his birth, I became skilled at
juggling wife-mother-writer responsibilities. I wrote while he napped. I hired
teenagers to play with him after they got home from school so I could write for
a couple of hours in the afternoon. I wrote in the evenings after dinner, when
my husband could take over the parenting. During the first year of my son’s
life, I wrote eleven complete romance novels, of which I eventually sold eight.
I thought this was what “having it all” meant. I was happy.
I was exhausted. I was very, very busy. But the books got written and my son
thrived.
At that first writers’ conference I attended, however, there
were no maternal duties. No toddler to chase after. No peanut-butter sandwiches to cut in zig-zags.
No baths. No diapers. No lullabies to sing at bedtime. No walks to the
neighborhood park, no pushes on the swing in the kiddie playground. No spills
during dinner, no squirming and fussing in the high chair, no racing for the
paper towels, the mop, or the Dust-Buster. I could actually sit throughout an
entire meal with a napkin on my lap, and speak to my dining companions in
complete sentences.
At the conference, I didn’t have to be anything but a
writer. I could focus all my attention on writing. I could talk shop with other
writers. I could discuss projects with my editors. I could think writing. No interruptions, no distractions, no multi-tasking.
For those few precious days, even thought I was waddling
around in maternity apparel and drinking milk instead of wine, I was a writer. A
full-time, 100% writer.
I can’t count how many conferences I’ve attended since that
first conference. My sons are men now. They can make their own peanut-butter
sandwiches. I no longer have to write detailed
instructions for my husband—“Guitar lesson at 3:30,” “Little League practice at
Haskell Field,” “Sign the permission slip for the school trip.” I can head off
to a conference without any stress.
And so I go. I learn things in the workshops. I frequently
present workshops myself. I hang out with my writer friends. I brainstorm new
projects, network with publishing professionals, share insights about
marketing, celebrate creative achievements, sign books, and vent about the ups and downs of
maintaining a long career in this crazy business. I drink—wine, not milk.
But the greatest pleasure of writers conferences for me remains
the same as it was at that very first conference so many years ago: when I go
to a writers’ conference, I am not a mom, a wife, a cook, a housekeeper, a chauffeur,
a permission-slip signer, or a multi-tasker. I am nothing but a writer.
Judith Arnold is
looking forward to attending a writers’ retreat in Maine next month, the NECRWA
“Let Your Imagination Take Flight” conference in May, the Romance Writers of
America national conference in July, and the Novelists Inc. conference in
October. Her new release, Dead Ball, the
first book in the Lainie Lovett Still
Kicking mystery series, is now available at Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and Books-a-Million. Please visit her web site
[www.juditharnold.com] to learn about her independently published romances. For more information about
her upcoming titles, sign up for her newsletter.
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